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The Technically Human Podcast
Deb Donig
100 episodes
8 months ago
Technically Human is a podcast about ethics and technology where I ask what it means to be human in the age of tech. Each week, I interview industry leaders, thinkers, writers, and technologists and I ask them about how they understand the relationship between humans and the technologies we create. We discuss how we can build a better vision for technology, one that represents the best of our human values.
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Technology
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All content for The Technically Human Podcast is the property of Deb Donig and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Technically Human is a podcast about ethics and technology where I ask what it means to be human in the age of tech. Each week, I interview industry leaders, thinkers, writers, and technologists and I ask them about how they understand the relationship between humans and the technologies we create. We discuss how we can build a better vision for technology, one that represents the best of our human values.
Show more...
Technology
Education,
Society & Culture
Episodes (20/100)
The Technically Human Podcast
High Tech Society: IEEE's vision for ethical technological advancement
In this episode of the show, I speak with Tom Coughlin, the standing President and CEO of IEEE, the world’s largest technical professional organization dedicated to advancing technology for the benefit of humanity. We discuss the IEEE’s vision of technological innovatinon, what it really means to ”benefit humanity” through tech, and how the tech sector can, and should, move toward a values-driven approach to innovation.
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1 year ago
57 minutes

The Technically Human Podcast
Debugging Division: The Architecture of Bridge-Building Social Media
Today we are bringing you a conversation featuring one technologist who is rethinking and reshaping social media—to build platforms that spark empathy and joy, not division and hate. Vardon Hamdiu is the co-founder and head of Sparkable, a young nonprofit organization that builds a social media platform aimed at bridging divides.
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1 year ago
53 minutes 1 second

The Technically Human Podcast
The Algorithm as Witness: Reimagining Holocaust Memory in the Digital Age
In this episode of ”Technically Human,” I bring you a conversation with one of the great thinkers working at the intersection of ethics and technology, Professor Todd Presner, for an episode about his new book, Ethics of the Algorithm: Digital Humanities and Holocaust Memory. In the conversation, we talk about new direction in Holocaust memory and scholarship, how technologies are enabling new approaches, questions, and interpretations of major historical events, and how digital technologies might help us imagine a new ethics of interpretation of history and memory.
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1 year ago
1 hour 19 minutes

The Technically Human Podcast
Game On, Hate Off: Navigating the Virtual Frontier
In this week’s episode of the show, I speak with Daniel Kelley, the Director of Strategy and Operations of the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) Center for Technology and Society (CTS), about the culture of online gaming, and the unique set of challenges in the gaming space, related to hate, harassment, and extremism.
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1 year ago
59 minutes 10 seconds

The Technically Human Podcast
Art, Tech, Self: Untangling the Human Algorithm
Hi Technically Human listeners! Welcome back to another episode of the show. Today I'm sitting down with Alva Noë. We talk about his new book, The Entanglement, and the relationship between technology, philosophy, and art. In The Entanglement, Professor Noë explores the inseparability of life, art, and philosophy, arguing that we have greatly underestimated what this entangled reality means for understanding human nature. Neither biology, cognitive science, nor AI can tell a complete story of us, and we can no more pin ourselves down than we can fix or settle on the meaning of an artwork. Even more, art and philosophy are the means to set ourselves free, at least to some degree, from convention, habit, technology, culture, and even biology. Dr. Alva Noë is a philosopher of mind whose research and teaching focus is perception and consciousness, and the philosophy of art. He is the author of Action in Perception (MIT, 2004); Out of Our Heads: Why You Are Not Your Brain and Other Lessons from the Biology of Consciousness (Farrar Straus and Giroux, 2009); Varieties of Presence (Harvard, 2012); Strange Tools: Art and Human Nature (Farrar Strauss and Giroux, 2015), Infinite Baseball: Notes from a Philosopher at the Ballpark (Oxford, 2019) and, most recently, Learning to Look: Dispatches from the Art World (Oxford 2021).  He holds a Bachelor of the Arts degree from Columbia University; a Bachelors of Philosophy. from University of Oxford;  and a Ph.D. from Harvard University. He teaches in the philosophy department of UC Berkeley.
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1 year ago
1 hour 4 minutes 20 seconds

The Technically Human Podcast
The QWERTY Keyboard and the Chinese Computer
In this episode of the show, I speak with Dr. Thomas Mullaney about his new book, The Chinese Computer. In the book, Dr. Mullaney outlines the history and evolution of Chinese language computing technology, and explores how the technology of the QWERTY keyboard changed this history of computing. We talk about how the structure of language has shaped the history of digital technologies, and Dr. Mullaney explains how China and the non-Western world—because of the “hypographic” technologies they had to invent in order to join the personal computing revolution— helps us understand the relationship between the human mind and the technologies it creates.
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1 year ago
1 hour 6 minutes 15 seconds

The Technically Human Podcast
Agree to Disagree: Are we living in an age of techno-pessimism?
To kick off the season, we are bringing you an episode that I’m calling “agree to disagree,” with two guests, Robert D. Atkinson and David Moschella, who join me to argue that the critiques of tech circulating in our environment are full of “myths and scapegoats,” the subject of their new book. We debate the role of regulation, the idea that our age is one of techno-pessimism, and, well, everything else!
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1 year ago
1 hour 17 minutes 30 seconds

The Technically Human Podcast
The Ethics and Technology of Teams in the Age of AI
Today I’m speaking with Projjal Ghatak, CEO & Co-Founder At Onloop, about the ethics of teamwork, collaboration, and providing constructive feedback.
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1 year ago
51 minutes

The Technically Human Podcast
Ethics Works: A day in the life of an ethics worker in tech
In this episode of the show, I speak with Sarah Fairweather about what it is like to be an ethics worker. We talk about how ethical work can sync up with business practices, how to develop a culture of ethics in industry, and Sarah talks me through what it is like to practice ethics as a day job.
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1 year ago
45 minutes

The Technically Human Podcast
Feel the Burn: A new novel explores the financial crisis in tech
In this episode of the show, I sit down with author Mike Trigg about his new novel, Burner. Mike Trigg is an author, a novelist, a tech executive, a tech founder, and an investor in dozens of technology start-up companies for over twenty-five years. His first novel, Bit Flip, was released in August 2022 to critical acclaim, lauded by the San Francisco Chronicle as a “twisty, acerbic corporate thriller.”
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1 year ago
1 hour 3 minutes 54 seconds

The Technically Human Podcast
Dr. Strangelanguage: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love Generative AI in Medicine
In this episode of the show, I sit down with Dr. Robert Pearl to talk about his new book, ChatGPT, MD: How AI-Empowered Patients & Doctors Can Take Back Control of American Medicine, a book he co-authored with...ChatGPT! We talk about the deep fractures and problems in American health care that Generative AI may be positioned to solve, the changing landscape of health care, and  the possibility that Amazon, Google, or OpenAI may become the nation’s latest healthcare providers.
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1 year ago
1 hour 5 minutes 59 seconds

The Technically Human Podcast
Taking the Temperature of AI: Measuring AI's Environmental Impact
In this episode of the show, I talk to Dr. Tamara Kneese about Data and Society’s initiative to develop standards and ways to measure the environmental impact of AI. I talk to Dr. Kneese about her work at the Algorithmic Impact Lab (AIMLab), we talk about the links and frictions between tech and climate change, and we consider how AI may be changing how we experience not only life, but also our experience of death.
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1 year ago
1 hour 5 minutes 45 seconds

The Technically Human Podcast
Brain Storm: The new technologies that are changing how we think about brain function
In today’s episode, I sit down with Dr. Peter Bonutti to talk about the ways in which technologies are revolutionizing our understanding of the brain, and how they may be used to treat crippling brain disorders such as stroke and seizures.
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1 year ago
1 hour 2 minutes 30 seconds

The Technically Human Podcast
The Singularity of Hope: The case for AI optimism
Today I am interviewing Dr. Sam Sammane about his forthcoming book, ”The Singularity of Hope”, which aims to guide readers through the challenges and opportunities of the AI era, advocating for a harmonious fusion of human intelligence and machine capabilities.
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1 year ago
1 hour 10 minutes 25 seconds

The Technically Human Podcast
The Count: The politics of data science
Welcome back to a brand-new season of Technically Human! We’re thrilled to be back with new episodes of the show. We are kicking off the new season, and the new year, with an episode featuring one of my favorite thinkers, Dr. Deborah Stone, to talk about what it means to count—that is to say, what it means to measure, and what it means to matter.
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1 year ago
1 hour 14 minutes 13 seconds

The Technically Human Podcast
Getting Public About Privacy: Understanding data privacy in the digital age
In this episode of the show, I talk with Jared Maslin about what it means to have privacy on the internet. We talk about the difference between privacy and secrecy, the benefits and limitations of GDPR and the possibility of privacy regulation coming to the US, and we explore the biggest challenges facing data privacy today.
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1 year ago
1 hour 17 minutes 37 seconds

The Technically Human Podcast
The Case for Cryptocurrency: The future of digital assets post Sam Bankman-Fried
In this week’s episode of the show I sit down with Dr. Tonya Evans to talk about the state of crypto in the wake of last week’s landmark criminal fraud conviction of the former CEO of FTX and the former prophet of crypto, Sam Bankman-Fried. Dr. Evans and I discuss what new crypto economy might emerge in the wake of his conviction. We discuss the principles and the possibilities of new digital assets, and we talk about the challenges of regulating new financial technologies.
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1 year ago
52 minutes 10 seconds

The Technically Human Podcast
The New Rules: challenging Big Tech’s reign over legal reform
In today’s episode, I talk about how to create new legal rules to guide tech toward reflecting human values with Brian Beckcom, one of the leading lawyers of his generation. We talk about the way that case law formed to treat piracy, that is to say, the practice of attacking and robbing ships at sea, and piracy in our digital age, that is to say, the unauthorized duplication of copyrighted content that is then sold at substantially lower prices in the ’grey’ market, We talk about the possibilities for, and the obstructions to, creating legislation that would stop some of the worst consequences and tendencies of big tech. And Brian makes the case for what law, at its most ethical and generative potential, might do to guide tech toward protecting and elevating human values.
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2 years ago
1 hour 26 minutes 30 seconds

The Technically Human Podcast
Soul Machines: Can AI have a body?
In this episode of the show, I sit down with Dr. Mark Sagar to talk about his vision of an embodied form of AI. Dr. Sagar is the co-founder and Chief Science Officer at Soul Machines, a company investigating how to use natural language processing with hyper-realistic visuals to create autonomously animated, emotionally dynamic Digital People. In addition to developing new technologies, the research seeks answers to big questions: should we be humanizing AI? How does feeding AI socio-emotional context help create rich, multimodal humanlike experiences, and at what point are we teetering on sentience? And what is really at stake the intersection of human cooperation with intelligent machines?
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2 years ago
1 hour 10 minutes

The Technically Human Podcast
Saving Israeli and Palestinian Lives: Technology For Life: Disaster relief and life-saving tech *From the Archives*
In this dark moment, I wanted to elevate one of our previous episodes featuring United Hatzalah. United Hatzallah is a volunteer-based organization which provides emergency medical response within minutes of any medical emergency for free. They are committed to saving human lives independent of race, religion, ethnicity, or national identity. They are non political and non religious. United Hatzalah volunteers respond to more than 675,000 calls per year throughout Israel and beyond its borders, saving lives every day. Insight Partners, a global software investor partnering with high-growth technology, software and internet startups, is currently matching donations to United Hatzallah, up to $1,000,000. Please consider supporting this effort, if you have the means.
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2 years ago
51 minutes 58 seconds

The Technically Human Podcast
Technically Human is a podcast about ethics and technology where I ask what it means to be human in the age of tech. Each week, I interview industry leaders, thinkers, writers, and technologists and I ask them about how they understand the relationship between humans and the technologies we create. We discuss how we can build a better vision for technology, one that represents the best of our human values.